FOREIGN AID: Life for New Chorwon

On 500 acres of well-kept land 80 miles
northeast of Seoul, Korea, stands the village of New Chorwon, where
some 500 people make a living from crops of potatoes, wheat, cabbage
and barley. It is not an unusual villageexcept in being a village at
all. Four years ago, the site was war-ravaged wasteland and the
villagers hopeless wanderers. What gave them life was the gift of a
68-year-old Philadelphia lawyer who does not believe in Christmas
presents but does believe in President Eisenhower's idea that foreign
aid can be on a person-to-person basis.